I'll also admit to Googling the word trying to get a hint, discovering it was a first name, and getting really annoyed that it wasn't in the naming book I consulted. That aside, no wonder D is such a bad-ass with Integra as the other half of the genetic equation. *snicker* Bat-covered PJs and all.

Vampires can be exceedingly charming when they need to be. They will joke, cajole and flatter, and just when you think, "vampires aren't so bad," you've got a pair of fangs buried in your neck.

For those who still insist on treating vampirism as a romantic existence, consider the suicide note left behind by Jacob Drexel, member of a prominent Philadelphia family who was transformed in 1937. After Drexel leaped off the City Hall tower one snowy night, a suicide note was found that closed with the following lines: "I have been living in constant torment over the unspeakable acts I have committed, and yet I am powerless to stop committing them. May God forgive me."

Vampires can be exceedingly charming when they need to be. They will joke, cajole and flatter, and just when you think, "vampires aren't so bad," you've got a pair of fangs buried in your neck.

For those who still insist on treating vampirism as a romantic existence, consider the suicide note left behind by Jacob Drexel, member of a prominent Philadelphia family who was transformed in 1937. After Drexel leaped off the City Hall tower one snowy night, a suicide note was found that closed with the following lines: "I have been living in constant torment over the unspeakable acts I have committed, and yet I am powerless to stop committing them. May God forgive me."

Vampires can be exceedingly charming when they need to be. They will joke, cajole and flatter, and just when you think, "vampires aren't so bad," you've got a pair of fangs buried in your neck.

For those who still insist on treating vampirism as a romantic existence, consider the suicide note left behind by Jacob Drexel, member of a prominent Philadelphia family who was transformed in 1937. After Drexel leaped off the City Hall tower one snowy night, a suicide note was found that closed with the following lines: "I have been living in constant torment over the unspeakable acts I have committed, and yet I am powerless to stop committing them. May God forgive me."

So that's Divyendu. Cute kid... but if Alucard's not the father... who IS?

Well, waaaaaaay back in this strip: http://hellsing.comicgenesis.com/d/20060509.html, we met D from Vampire Hunter D. D came about after his father Dracula (considered the grandfather of all vampires) did a lot of genetic experiments between him & humans, and D was his only success.

So that's Divyendu. Cute kid... but if Alucard's not the father... who IS?

Well, waaaaaaay back in this strip: http://hellsing.comicgenesis.com/d/20060509.html, we met D from Vampire Hunter D. D came about after his father Dracula (considered the grandfather of all vampires) did a lot of genetic experiments between him & humans, and D was his only success.

So that's Divyendu. Cute kid... but if Alucard's not the father... who IS?

Well, waaaaaaay back in this strip: http://hellsing.comicgenesis.com/d/20060509.html, we met D from Vampire Hunter D. D came about after his father Dracula (considered the grandfather of all vampires) did a lot of genetic experiments between him & humans, and D was his only success.

Maybe Divyendu came about in a similar way.

I still say Divyendu is D. At some point during those 10,000 years he realized his mother gave him a funny name. Besides it could be anime canon vampire hunter d. Books one and 3 didn't really cover the whole Darcula mad scientist angle if i remember correctly. Been ages since i tried to watch what was animated keep stopping because the anime has crosses.

Vampires can be exceedingly charming when they need to be. They will joke, cajole and flatter, and just when you think, "vampires aren't so bad," you've got a pair of fangs buried in your neck.

For those who still insist on treating vampirism as a romantic existence, consider the suicide note left behind by Jacob Drexel, member of a prominent Philadelphia family who was transformed in 1937. After Drexel leaped off the City Hall tower one snowy night, a suicide note was found that closed with the following lines: "I have been living in constant torment over the unspeakable acts I have committed, and yet I am powerless to stop committing them. May God forgive me."